Thomas S. Kidd is distinguished professor of history at Baylor University. His books include Benjamin Franklin: The Religious Life of a Founding Father and Who Is an Evangelical? The History of a Movement in Crisis. He lives in Woodway, Texas.
What we need is a balanced reassessment of Jefferson's thought and attitudes on God and religion. Thomas S. Kidd, a professor of history at Baylor, gives us that in his crisply written life Thomas Jefferson: A Biography of Spirit and Flesh. --Barton Swaim, Wall Street Journal Kidd's biography may well be the best treatment of Jefferson's religious and moral life available, and certainly it is among the few to take those two subjects seriously while carefully avoiding hagiography or anachronism. It deserves a wide readership. --Miles Smith, National Review Our current cultural climate incentivizes black-and-white judgments about America's past, making Thomas S. Kidd's new biography refreshing. His book provides a nuanced and intimate analysis of Jefferson that illuminates the man's contradictory nature. --Collin Garbarino, World Set aside everything you think you know about Thomas Jefferson and religion, and read this book. Thomas Jefferson: A Biography of Spirit and Flesh is the definitive account. It is well-written, well-researched, judicious, and entirely convincing. --Timothy Larsen, Wheaton College At long last, we have a biography of Thomas Jefferson that treats the enigmatic founder as more than just a living symposium of ideas or as a living museum of hypocrisies. In this long-awaited book, Thomas Kidd, one of the world's most respected historians, portrays for us a compellingly complicated human being--who through both genius and will, and despite grave flaws, gave us a country we could not recognize apart from him. For people all across the ideological spectrum, this biography will be the starting point for countless new arguments and ideas. --Russell Moore, Chair of Theology, Christianity Today I don't know a scholar more able than Thomas Kidd to bring breadth, depth, and moral clarity to a treatment of a figure as significant and complicated as Thomas Jefferson--and to do so with vivid, compelling prose that will engage a broad audience of readers. --Karen Swallow Prior, Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary Kidd has written a unique work--'a narrative of Jefferson's moral universe'--that will make an outstanding contribution to scholarship on Jefferson. --James Byrd, Vanderbilt Divinity School In 'trying to untangle the thicket of Jefferson's moral, philosophical, and theological commitments, in the context of his time, not ours' while avoiding both 'patriotic apologetics' and 'iconoclastic destruction, ' Thomas Kidd gives us the Thomas Jefferson we need right now. --Kevin R. C. Gutzman, author of Thomas Jefferson--Revolutionary: A Radical's Struggle to Remake America